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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 6 days ago
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‘ DOLLY’S GARDEN OF ROSES! ★
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“ELIJAH “SMOKE” MOORE.”
• “plug!smoke x nerdy!black!fem!reader.”
• “smoke x reader x stack!”
• “yearning!bestfriend!smoke x spoiled!black!fem!reader.”
• “playground rules - smoke x reader x stack.”
• “criminal!smoke x black!fem!bimbo!dumb-ish!reader.”
“ELIAS “STACK” MOORE.”
• “smoke x reader x stack!”
• “playground rules - smoke x reader x stack.”
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( @cursed-carmine for the dividers.)
“all i wanna, ain’t not other, we together i remember sweet love all long. they say true loves the greatest weapon. to win the war caused by pain. but every diamond has imperfections but my love was too pure to watch it chip away. boy nothing real can be threatened, true love brings salvation back into. me. with every tear came redemption, and my torturer ‘came my remedy. so many people i know just tryna touch ya, kiss up and feel up on ya. kiss up and feel up on ya. all night long.”
-beyoncĂŠ.
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 6 days ago
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‘ AT THE SAME DAMN TIME, chap 1.
synopsis; After a messy, short-lived situationship with Stack—reckless, flirtatious, and all the wrong kinds of possessive—you swear you’re done with hood boys who can’t keep up. But when you drop something off at his mother’s store and find both Stack and his older twin brother Smoke inside, something shifts.
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The heat outside was disrespectful. Sun glaring off the concrete, your thighs sticking to the driver’s seat, and not a single breeze in sight. Still, you parked outside Lo’s Beauty Supply—their mama’s shop—with a brown paper bag in your lap and sweat beading at your collarbone.
The bag was nothing major. Just some coconut oil their mama had asked for from your auntie’s store across town. Said she liked your family’s blend better than what she had. You told her you’d swing by and drop it off. Easy. Casual. No problem. What you didn’t expect was for both Stack and Smoke to be inside when you walked through that door.
The bell above the entrance gave a lazy jingle, announcing you before your presence could.“Be right wit’chu,” called a voice from the back—Ms. Moore, no doubt, still doing somebody’s scalp in the back room like she always did.
Your eyes adjusted from the sunlight to the store’s warm haze, and that’s when you saw them. Stack, posted up on the edge of the checkout counter, legs spread, head tilted back, puffing on a cigar like he had zero business being fine and full of himself.
And Smoke, leaned back in the folding chair just behind him, tapping ash into a red Solo cup. One foot propped against the wall. His eyes already on you.
The smell of burning tobacco, hair grease, and old incense hit you in the chest. Thick, nostalgic, weighted. This place always felt like somebody’s house and a little bit like a trap spot. Especially when the boys were there.
You stood in the doorway for a half-second longer than you meant to, blinking—and that was enough.
Stack’s mouth curved.
“Ain’t you look like you tryna be seen today,” he drawled, eyes skating from the band of your crop top down to the stretch of your brown thighs. “You knew I was gon’ be here, huh?”
You didn’t answer that.
Instead, you walked forward, hips loose, chin high, the brown paper bag crinkling in your hand. You placed it on the counter between them—right where Stack was leaned, and right across from Smoke’s shadow.
“This what your mama asked for. Tell her I dropped it off.” Smoke hadn’t said a word yet. But his gaze lingered like a hot palm on your skin.
He wasn’t disrespectful like Stack was. He didn’t flirt with words. But his eyes? His whole presence? That was a different type of heat. Where Stack looked at you like he remembered what your moans sounded like, Smoke looked at you like he was imagining them.
Slowly. Without apology. You felt it. The flicker in your stomach. The ache in your thighs you couldn’t chalk up to the weather.
You turned slightly, letting the breeze from the weak AC hit the side of your neck. Your baby hairs were already curling from the sweat, your lip gloss sticking sweet to the corner of your mouth.
“Tell her I’ll be back later in the week. She said she wanted more but I ain’t have enough on me.”Stack chuckled under his breath, lighting his cigar again like he needed something to distract himself.
“You always comin’ ‘round with not enough,” he muttered, voice low and rough. “Shit, you did that with me too, huh?” That made Smoke lift his head—not fully, just a twitch at the corner of his mouth. Like he wasn’t even tryna get involved. But his eyes were still on you.
“I had enough for who needed it,” you replied sweetly, not even turning around. “Wasn’t my fault you ain’t know how to keep your hands to yourself.”
That earned a short, cold laugh from the corner.
Stack sucked his teeth, but you didn’t stay long enough for him to talk back. You turned, braid swinging over your shoulder, and gave a little wave toward the back room.
“Tell Ms. Moore I said ill be back.”
And just as you hit the door, your hand barely grazing the cool metal handle, Smoke finally spoke. “I will,” he said. Voice deep like gravel. Heavy. Final.
Then quieter: “And next time, don’t rush out. You stay longer.” The door creaked behind you, but you caught the way Stack looked at him. Tight-lipped. Sharp. Like this was the first time it happened, but maybe not the last. Outside, the sun didn’t feel as hot.
But something in you was burning. You weren’t supposed to like the way he said that. You weren’t supposed to think about him watching you from that chair. And you sure as hell weren’t supposed to want to test how far Smoke would let this go.
But you did.
And deep down?
You hoped next time, he’d make you stay.
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@cursed-carmine for the dividers.
i legit don’t know how the hell i keep writing these back to back like this.. but chapter two should be coming soon.
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 9 days ago
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So thankful for all the BTS shots we’re getting, but this action shot tho! 🤣🤣
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 9 days ago
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Chapter 1 - The First Bite
A/N: First off, I wanna thank @nahimjustfeelingit-writes for coming up with this dope ass idea & @anaiyaflys143 for suggesting I write it. I hope I do you both justice. I think I want this to have multiple parts, but I need life to cooperate. Hope y'all enjoy!
*All character images created by me ☺️*
Characters: Elias "Stack" Moore, Eden Taylor (OC)
Warning(s): 18+, Adult Language, Supernatural Elements, Typical Vampire Shit, Vampire Kink, Explicit Sex (Not yet, but it's coming)
Summary: Eden’s broke. Her rent’s late, her car sounds like it’s choking, and her dreams of making it as a singer in New Orleans are getting harder to hold onto. So when she sees a sketchy little ad offering big cash to be a “discreet donor,” she answers it. She tells herself it’s just money. Just blood. Just once. But the contract’s signed, the room is breathing, and Eden? She might’ve just stepped into something deeper than debt.
Word Count: 5.5K
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New Orleans, 2005
Eden stared blankly at the digits on the weathered ATM.
$14.26.
All the money she had left from her work-study check that wouldn’t replenish for another week. Between rent, paying for studio time, and outfits for her upcoming shows, Eden had left herself broke and destitute yet again.
“Who told you to take the term ‘starving artist’ so literally?” she muttered to herself, tucking the receipt into the pocket of her tattered jean jacket.
She hadn’t eaten a real meal in two days. Just a gas station honey bun, half a bottle of warm Sprite, and whatever sleep could trick her body into thinking it was full. Her rust-colored Honda ran on a quarter tank and prayer, the engine coughing every time she turned the key. The inside smelled like jasmine body spray, fried hair, and quiet panic.
Fishing her Motorola Razr from the depths of her tote, she scrolled to the contact labeled “Pops.” She stared at it for a long moment, thumb hovering, before finally pressing CALL.
Three rings. A click.
“Yo,” came the gravelly voice on the other end. Always detached. Always mid-something more important.
“Hey,” Eden said, trying not to sound too pitiful. “You got like…twenty dollars I could borrow?”
A long pause. She could practically hear him blinking.
“Sorry, kiddo, I’m all tapped out.”
She knew it was a lie. He always said that. She could hear a game show buzzing faintly in the background, followed by the sound of beer cracking open. But she didn’t press it.
“It’s cool, Pops.” She cleared her throat, pushing down the lump forming there. “I’ll make something shake. I saw an ad for a babysitting gig in the Garden District, so I’ll try that.”
“Good,” he said, voice already drifting. “See? You ain’t gotta always be runnin’ after those stage lights. Just find somethin’ steady.”
She didn’t respond. Just hung up and slid the phone back into her purse like it was a loaded gun.
Back at her tiny studio apartment in Mid-City, Eden sat cross-legged on her futon, her open planner in her lap. A flyer for an open mic night at Tipitina’s was pinned above her bed with a pink glitter pushpin. She had two weeks to come up with a new track and scrape together the $80 she owed her producer for the beat she was using.
She opened her laptop, praying it would connect to the neighbor’s spotty Wi-Fi. While it loaded, she scribbled in the margins of her notebook:
“I ain’t tryna sing for scraps, I want velvet on my mic stand Moët in my vocal booth, not noodles from the nightstand…”
Cute. Maybe.
She clicked over to Craigslist. Typing “cash gigs” in the search bar had become second nature.
Dog walking. House cleaning. Foot modeling?
But then, something new. Something far from anything she’d seen listed before.
“DONOR OPPORTUNITY – NIGHT WORK. DISCREET. HIGH COMPENSATION. 21+ ONLY. Must be comfortable with blood. Text 504-9VAMPYR.”
Eden raised an eyebrow. 
“Blood?”
She clicked anyway.
The ad was vague but intriguing. It promised “stress-free, safe work” for “exclusive clientele.” It also mentioned “consent-based feeding arrangements,” which sounded... weirdly medical. Or criminal.
She almost exited the tab—but her mouse hovered over the last line:
“Neck: $300/hr. Wrist: $400/hr. Inner thigh: $550/hr. Discretion required.”
She burst out laughing, sharp and alone in her little apartment. “Yeah, okay. That’s definitely a scam. Probably run by some dude named Clarence with a fake fang kink.”
But something about it stuck. Along with her passion for music, she also had a passion for all things occult: vampires, black magic, and everything in between. She was the bayou bruja stereotype personified, save the fact that she didn’t actually know any spells.
Eden wasn’t sure what it was about this ad that had her so curious. Maybe it was the dollar signs flashing in her mind. Perhaps it was the way her stomach twisted with nerves and low-grade hunger. Or maybe it was the fact that being bitten on the thigh for rent money somehow felt less soul-crushing than waitressing at a chain diner where the manager hit on her.
She grabbed her phone and typed quickly.
Eden T. | Type O- | Available Nights
Then she added, like a joke she hoped the universe would get:
“I sing too, in case that’s relevant.”
She snickered to herself until the number responded, almost immediately.
504-9VAMPYR:
“Voice matters more than you know. You’re expected tonight. Come dressed in black. No perfume. Bring ID.”
Attached was a pin drop to an address in the Warehouse District. The kind of place that always looked abandoned from the outside but was crawling with secrets beneath the surface.
Eden stared at the screen. Then at her closet.
She had a mesh crop top, a fake leather skirt, and her beat-up Doc Martens. Close enough to black. She pulled them out with a sigh and laid them across her unmade bed. Her hands lingered on the hem of the skirt, suddenly wondering if she should shave. Then she laughed out loud, dry and humorless.
“Girl, if he’s a vampire, you think he cares about some stubble?” she mused, glancing down at her untamed bikini line.
She peeled off her hoodie and leggings and tugged on the outfit with practiced ease. The crop top rode up a little too high, showing off the silver belly ring she got impulsively after a poetry night and three Hennessy shots. She tightened the straps on her Docs and pulled her curls into a high puff, fluffing it just enough to look intentional.
Eyeliner came next. Heavy, winged, and slightly uneven, like it had been applied in a moving car or in the middle of a breakdown. She smudged a bit of charcoal shadow beneath her lower lashes for good measure, giving her eyes that soft, smoky bruised look, like she hadn’t slept in days but might still stab you if you stared too long.
A dusting of translucent powder dimmed the natural shine of her skin, but she let her freckles peek through. She dabbed a hint of burgundy gloss on her lips and pressed highlighter onto the high points of her cheeks and the tip of her nose. Just enough to glow under bad lighting.
She looked like something out of a Southern ghost story. Part beauty queen, part grieving widow. Like the kind of girl you'd see barefoot on a sagging porch in the heat of July, black veil over her eyes, sipping sweet tea that might just kill you.
She stepped back from the mirror and tilted her chin to the left.
She didn’t look like someone about to audition for a vampire sugar daddy.
She looked like someone who had nothing left to lose.
But that was the thing about having nothing. It made you bold. Eden didn’t feel fear. Not yet. What she felt was unavailable. Numb, on the edge of something primal. Like her instincts were holding their breath, waiting to see if she was about to step into a miracle… or a casket.
She grabbed the rose water mist from her nightstand, hesitated, then spritzed a light veil of it over her curls instead of her neck. Just a whisper of hydration and a ghost of a scent that faded almost instantly. The text had said no perfume, and she wasn’t trying to test boundaries with creatures who drank life juice for breakfast.
She grabbed her keys, slipped her phone into her bra, and stared down at her chipped black nail polish before muttering, “Don’t do anything stupid.”
Then she locked the door behind her.
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The drive to the Warehouse District felt longer than it was. The rust-colored Honda coughed once at a red light and stuttered like it was nervous, too. Eden slapped the dash like she was coaxing a stubborn mule.
“Not tonight, baby, c’mon…”
She turned up the radio, some old Destiny’s Child track with a beat strong enough to drown her thoughts. She sang along half-heartedly, mouthing the lyrics more than meaning them, her fingers drumming against the steering wheel like she was trying to tap the fear out of her bloodstream.
Her mind didn’t cooperate.
What if it’s a cult? What if they drain you and leave you in a ditch behind a daiquiri shop? What if it’s real?
She wasn’t sure which possibility scared her more.
She pulled up to the address just after midnight. The building loomed like it had been waiting for her. It was tall, industrial, and built from bones and bad decisions. The kind of place that still smelled faintly of sweat, rust, and prohibition. Like someone had converted a cotton mill into a nightclub and then forgotten to put up a sign.
All the windows were blacked out. No buzz of neon. No music. No movement. Just that single red light above the steel door, blinking slow and steady like a pulse. Or a warning.
Eden sat there for a second longer than she meant to, the engine idling as her hand hovered near the key. Her stomach flipped, hard and sudden. It was that same twist she felt before going on stage, before she opened her mouth and let the world judge her voice, her dream, her want.
That anticipatory ache. That leap of faith you had to take before a mic, a man, or a monster.
Then she got out.
The air hit her like a wet rag, thick with humidity, heavy with something else. Something older than the pavement beneath her boots. The breeze curled around her ankles and crept up her spine, stirring the hem of her skirt and making the back of her neck prickle.
There was a scent in the air, faint but unmistakable. Jasmine. Smoke. No, ash. Burnt incense. Like the end of a ritual.
She stepped forward, gravel crunching beneath her boots, the only sound in the stillness. No music. No voices. Just her breath and that red light, blinking above her like a slow countdown.
When she reached the door, it opened before she could knock.
Not with a creak. Not with a dramatic hiss. Just a smooth, effortless glide, like whoever or whatever was on the other side had been expecting her the whole time.
Eden paused in the threshold, heart thudding against her ribs like a warning bell. She glanced once over her shoulder, back at her Honda parked under the flickering streetlamp, its paint dull and flaking like old blood.
She could leave. She could run.
But she didn’t.
Instead, she squared her shoulders, tucked her gloss-smudged lips into a tight line, and stepped into the dark.
A man stood just inside. Pale. No older than thirty, if you could even put an age on someone like that. His black dress shirt was perfectly pressed, tucked into tailored pants that caught the low light like water. Silver chains shimmered across his collarbone, subtle and cold. White gloves on both hands, like he was either about to serve a five-course meal or prep a body for burial.
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His eyes swept over her. Not sexual, not even curious. More like he was measuring her for something. A scan. Efficient, impersonal. She might as well have been a barcode.
“You’re Eden,” he said.
It wasn’t a question.
“I am,” she replied, doing her best to keep her voice steady.
“Follow me.”
So she did.
The hallway was long and narrow, padded in deep red velvet that brushed against her shoulders every few steps. The walls breathed warmth, but the air stayed cool, scented faintly with clove, old paper, and something floral that had long since dried out. Dim amber sconces flickered along the path, casting warped shadows that stretched and curled with her movements. It didn’t feel like walking into a building. It felt like being swallowed.
Each step took her further from reality. Her dad’s voice in the car, still ringing with disappointment. The zeroes in her bank account. The half-finished demo she couldn’t afford to master. All of it fell away, like static detaching from a radio dial. She wasn’t sure if she was floating or sinking.
The man said nothing, just led her deeper.
Eventually, they reached a door. It looked ancient, carved with symbols she didn’t recognize. Something that felt older than language, older than the city itself. They pulsed faintly under the glow of the hallway lights, as if alive beneath the grain of the wood.
The man knocked once. A dull, heavy sound.
Then he turned the handle and pushed the door open. He didn’t go in. Just stepped aside and motioned for her to enter.
Eden hesitated. Only for a second. Long enough to feel her heart rise in her throat, thick and loud. Then she stepped over the threshold.
And the world changed.
The air inside was cooler, denser, but it didn’t chill her. It settled around her skin like silk. Everything glowed in shades of wine and shadow. Low lights glinting off crystal, velvet drapes billowing near tall windows sealed shut. Music played somewhere far away, too soft to follow but rich enough to taste.
It wasn’t a room. It was a scene. A set. A spell.
Her eyes adjusted slowly, drawn toward the figure seated at the far end.
And that was when she saw him.
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Her eyes adjusted slowly, drawn to the figure at the far end of the room.
He sat like he owned more than just the building. Like he owned the hour, the tension, even the breath in her lungs. Leaning back in a high-backed leather chair, one leg crossed over the other, fingers resting loosely on the armrest, he looked every bit the gentleman devil.
He wore a deep burgundy suit that soaked up the light like velvet. It was tailored so sharply it could’ve drawn blood. Gold embroidery traced the lapels in delicate patterns, only catching the light when he moved. Serpents, maybe, or ivy, curling like secrets. A thick gold Cuban link chain sat heavy against his chest, and a matching pinky ring caught the lamplight when he lifted his hand to his jaw.
His skin was smooth, the kind of smooth that didn’t come from skincare, but from time. A warm brown, almost bronze, like whiskey left out in the sun. He looked like he could be in his late twenties, but Eden could feel the weight behind the stillness. The kind of quiet you feel in old houses or graveyards.
Then there were his eyes.
They held a faint glow, not glaring or artificial, but soft and strange, like candlelight burning behind thick purple glass. The color wasn’t the unsettling part; it was the depth. If she stared too long, she’d probably see everything he’d done and everything he wanted from her now.
And when he smiled—
It wasn’t wide. Just a small curl of his mouth, more on the left side, like he was letting her in on a secret she didn’t deserve to hear yet. That’s when she saw it. A gold open-faced grill on one of his fangs, subtle and gleaming. Not flashy or loud, just intentional. The kind of accessory that told you he’d been rich for longer than you’d been alive and had nothing left to prove.
Eden’s breath caught before she could stop it. She wasn’t sure if it was fear or fascination. Probably both.
He didn’t stand.
He didn’t need to.
His voice rolled out, low and velvet-smooth, the kind that made people lean in without realizing.
“Eden,” he said, her name sitting on his tongue like something rare and expensive.
She nodded once. “That’s me.”
His gaze flicked downward, taking in her boots, her skirt, the smudge of eyeliner she hadn’t meant to look perfect. He wasn’t judging her. He was gathering details, building a file in his mind.
“Pretty name,” he said. “Pretty girl.”
Her jaw tightened at the compliment. She’d heard it too many times before from broke boys and drunk strangers. But from him, it didn’t feel cheap. It felt like a warning.
“Thanks,” she replied, her voice quieter now.
Stack tilted his head just enough to shift the mood. Not much. Just enough to make her uneasy.
“I’m Elias Moore,” he said. “But folks around here call me Stack.”
“Stack,” she repeated.
He gave her that same half-smile.
“I like a girl who listens.”
Then he rose from his chair.
Not quickly. Not slow either. Just smoothly, like he didn’t have to try. He was taller than she expected, and his frame filled the room like music you couldn’t turn down. He moved with purpose, not just confidence, but certainty, like the floor had always been waiting for his footsteps.
When he stopped in front of her, close enough for her to feel the stillness coming off him, she realized he didn’t wear cologne. The flyer had warned against perfume, and he clearly followed the same rule. But still, there was a scent. Faint and warm, like sandalwood, old leather, maybe even dried jasmine crushed into parchment.
He raised a gloved hand.
“You can leave anytime you want,” he said. “But if you take one more step, you’re choosing not to.”
She looked at his hand. Elegant. Dead. Gold ring catching the light.
Her heart kicked hard in her chest.
She didn’t take his hand.
But she didn’t move away either.
His hand hovered in the space between them for another second before he let it fall.
Stack nodded toward a low velvet chair across from his own. “Sit if you want. Or stand. Some people feel safer that way.”
Eden moved without thinking, sliding into the seat like her knees might give out otherwise. Her palms were sweating, but she kept them in her lap. He didn’t look like the type who’d offer napkins.
The silence stretched, but it didn’t feel empty. It felt full of decisions. Stack poured two fingers of something amber into a crystal glass from a decanter by his elbow, then slid it across the table toward her. He didn’t pour himself one.
Eden stared at it. “Is it safe?”
Stack grinned, just a flash of gold and teeth. “Safer than most things you’ve done to chase a dream, I’d bet.”
She didn’t answer. Just stared down at the drink and finally lifted it, more out of pride than thirst. It burned, but not bad. Smooth like molasses with a bite at the end, like it knew you had secrets and didn’t mind.
He leaned forward, elbows on his knees. “Let’s talk about the job.”
Eden sat straighter. “Alright.”
“You know the basics,” Stack said. “You let someone feed. You get paid. How far you want to go is up to you.”
He tapped a long finger against the table, slow, like a metronome counting down something important.
“Neck’s three hundred an hour. Wrist’s fourhundred, thigh’s five-fifty. Shoulder anywhere else, we can negotiate. You can sign on as a regular, or keep it casual. We also offer exclusive arrangements. More private. More lucrative. More dangerous.”
Eden pulled her bottom lip between her teeth and nodded, pretending she wasn’t halfway to hyperventilating. Her mouth felt like cotton and her stomach wouldn’t stop fluttering. But her voice held steady.
“What’s the risk?”
Stack shrugged. “Some vampires don’t know when to stop. Some donors fall in love. Some folks just aren’t built for it. We vet both sides, but accidents happen. That’s why we sign oaths. Confidentiality. Consent. Boundaries.”
She stared at him for a moment. “And you? What do you do here? Besides sit in velvet and look... like that.”
He smiled again, but slower this time, like he appreciated the jab. “I run this place. I built it. I make sure the hungry don’t get sloppy, and the desperate don’t disappear. That’s my job.”
“And if I disappear anyway?”
Stack’s smile faded, not into anger, but into something quieter. He looked at her in that same scanning way from before. Like he was looking past the makeup, past the attitude, down into the parts of her she didn’t let people touch.
“You got people who’d come looking for you?”
Eden thought of her dad. His voice on the phone, always clipped when she brought up music or asked for help. She thought of her name on the caller ID and the way he probably paused before letting it go to voicemail.
“No,” she said. “Not really.”
Stack didn’t look surprised. “Then you’re the kind of girl this place was made for.”
The room settled into stillness again, thick as gumbo. The only sound was the soft buzz of something electrical and the faint thump of music far beneath them. Eden’s thoughts were running in circles, dragging every old warning and new curiosity with them.
She thought about her bank account. About the way her car shuddered when she turned the key. About the silk dress she wanted to wear for her next show that still sat in the consignment window with a tag she couldn’t afford.
She thought about her voice. That gift she was chasing like it owed her something. Every sacrifice. Every studio hour. Every burnt-out candle and scribbled lyric.
And then she thought about this room. This man. This offer that felt like it came from a door she didn’t know she’d already opened.
“What happens if I say yes?” she asked.
Stack’s eyes didn’t blink. “Then I’ll take care of you. I’ll make sure you’re fed, rested, paid. Protected. You give me your time and a little of your blood. I give you everything else.”
“And if I want more?” she asked, softer now. “Not just money. I want freedom. A little power of my own.”
For the first time, something shifted in his face. Not surprise, but interest. Real interest.
“You’d be surprised what blood can buy,” he said. “Especially when it’s yours.”
Eden exhaled slow. She didn’t know if she believed him, but she wanted to. That scared her more than anything.
She looked down at her chipped nail polish, at the ring she kept on her pinky for good luck, then back up at him.
“I’ll try it,” she said. “Once.”
Stack nodded like he already knew. He stood again and reached into his jacket, pulling out a folded piece of parchment. Not paper. Parchment. The kind that smelled like it belonged in a museum. He laid it on the table with a small, weighted pen.
“Name, date, initials here and here. Once you sign, the room changes.”
Eden raised an eyebrow. “What does that mean?”
Stack’s purple eyes gleamed. “You’ll see.”
She stared at the parchment. Her heart thumped a little faster now, but she didn’t hesitate.
She signed.
And the room breathed.
Not literally, but that’s how it felt. The wallpaper shifted, shadows deepened. Something behind her spine tingled, as if the walls were watching now.
Stack watched her, too. “You hungry?”
Eden blinked. “A little.”
He extended a hand. This time, she took it.
His hand was cool. Not cold like death, just cooler than it should’ve been. Like he hadn’t been touched by sun or sweat in years. Eden followed him through a second doorway that hadn’t been there a moment ago. She could’ve sworn that wall was solid when she walked in. Now it opened like a secret.
The new room was quieter. Darker, too, but not in a threatening way. It felt... sacred. The lighting came from candles tucked into glass sconces, their flames barely flickering. The walls were painted a deep garnet that made the space feel like it had been dipped in wine. Heavy curtains hung in the corners like they were hiding more than windows.
At the center of the room sat a low velvet couch and a wide leather chair shaped like a throne, but not gaudy. Worn in. Like someone had loved it for a long time. The air smelled faintly of clove and something richer, something warm. It wrapped around her like a robe.
“Sit wherever you’re comfortable,” Stack said, his voice lower now, closer to a whisper.
Eden moved to the couch. Her legs didn’t feel like her own anymore. The velvet was soft under her fingers, like the kind of fabric rich people bought without checking the price tag. She leaned back and took a breath.
Stack remained standing. He didn’t hover, didn’t crowd her. Just watched.
“I’m going to ask again,” he said. “Are you hungry?”
Eden nodded. “Yeah.”
He smiled, slower this time. Less show. More meaning.
“Good. Then we’ll make it clean.”
He walked over to a cabinet near the back of the room and pulled out a shallow silver bowl, etched with symbols she didn’t recognize. Then he lit a bundle of dried herbs and let the smoke curl into the corners. It didn’t choke the air, just warmed it, changed it. Eden felt something loosen in her chest. The fear didn’t vanish, but it dulled.
“This is how we start,” he said. “No one touches without consent. You say stop, I stop. You say no, we’re done. Say the word mercy if anything feels wrong.”
She nodded. “Mercy.”
“Good girl.”
The words should’ve felt patronizing. But they didn’t. They felt like a key turning in a door.
He set the bowl on a low table beside the couch, then took off his gloves. His hands were ringed in gold and the veins under his skin looked faintly violet, like there was something strange running through him.
“Where?”
Eden’s throat went dry.
She remembered the ad. Neck. Thigh. Wrist. Options like a damn menu. It sounded transactional until it was real. Until you had to say it out loud to someone who would actually do it.
She tilted her head, just slightly, exposing her throat.
“Neck,” she said. “Just there.”
Stack moved slowly, no rush in him. He came to sit beside her, close but careful, like she was a page in a holy book he wasn’t sure he had permission to read. He didn’t touch her at first. Just looked.
His eyes had that same violet glow, soft and low like candlelight. There was no hunger in them, not the way she’d imagined. No animal in the shadows. Just need, steady and patient.
He brushed her curls back with a single finger. His touch was deliberate. Reverent.
“You’ll feel pressure,” he said. “Then warmth.”
She nodded, even though her heart was hammering so hard she could barely hear her own breath.
He leaned in.
His mouth was cool against her skin, not open at first. Just resting there. Then she felt it. A brief, sharp ache, like a pinprick from a needle that knew where to go. Not pain exactly. More like being opened.
Then came the warmth. A slow pull that tugged at her chest and her belly and somewhere deeper. It was dizzying. She gripped the couch cushion beside her and let her eyes fall shut.
She thought it would feel like something being taken from her. But it didn’t. It felt like something shared. Something circular. Like her blood was telling a story and he was just listening, slow and careful, taking only what he needed.
When he pulled back, he let out a slow breath against her skin.
“That’s enough.”
Eden blinked her eyes open. Her limbs felt light, her mind foggy but soft, like she’d just come out of a warm bath.
He pressed a cool cloth to her neck, then leaned back to give her space.
“How do you feel?” he asked.
She had to think about it. Then she smiled.
“Like I just got kissed by something dangerous.”
Stack chuckled, low and pleased. “That’s because you did.”
He stood and reached for a small black envelope on the side table. Inside was a stack of crisp bills. Cash. The real kind. Eden took it with fingers that still tingled.
“This is yours,” he said. “For tonight.”
She didn’t count it. She didn’t need to.
Stack looked down at her, head slightly tilted. “You ever want more, you know where to find me.”
Eden stood, a little shakier than she expected. She gathered her purse, her keys, her thoughts. Her neck still throbbed gently, but not in a bad way.
“Thank you,” she said, unsure if that was the right thing to say.
“You’re welcome,” he said. “And Eden?”
She turned.
His eyes were glowing again, soft but unreadable.
“You were made for this.”
She didn’t answer. She just walked out into the night, heart pounding, mouth dry, and mind racing. The street outside was the same as when she’d arrived. But she wasn’t.
Not anymore.
The rust-colored Honda didn’t shudder this time. It purred like it was just as stunned as she was.
Eden drove with the windows down, letting the thick New Orleans night wrap around her like a wet velvet shawl. The air was rich with honeysuckle, oil, and the ghost of a second line that had long since moved on. Her neck still buzzed, not with pain, but with presence. A lingering echo of fangs and breath and a moment that felt like it cracked something open inside her.
She rolled past the neon flicker of corner stores and daiquiri shops, the cracked sidewalks of uptown giving way to potholes and porch lights. Her thoughts moved as slowly as her car did. Heavy, syrupy things that stuck to the edges of her brain and refused to form full sentences.
She’d sold her blood. Just handed it over like a receipt. Signed her name on a scroll older than any contract she’d ever seen. Sat inches from a man with glowing eyes and a golden fang and said yes.
And yet… she didn’t feel wrong.
Her heartbeat was steady now, settled. Her limbs were loose and lazy, like her body knew something she didn’t. Like it had crossed a threshold and didn’t see a reason to go back.
At a red light, she glanced at the cash in her passenger seat. Real money. More than she’d made in a month of folding sweaters at the campus bookstore. Her fingers twitched with the urge to count it, to be sure, but something in her resisted. That wasn’t what mattered.
What mattered was how she felt. And for once, it wasn’t desperate.
It was dangerous.
She parked outside her apartment just after two a.m., the same flickering streetlamp buzzing above her like always. Normally, she would’ve slumped inside, peeled off her shoes, microwaved something sad, and stared at her ceiling until sleep came to find her. But tonight she sat still in the car, engine off, listening to the sound of cicadas and the low rumble of the city that never really slept.
She touched her neck. There was no bandage. Just skin. Tender, yes, but smooth.
Like he’d never been there.
But he had. And her body remembered.
When she finally made it inside, Eden didn’t bother undressing. She collapsed onto her bed face-up, curls fanned across the pillow, clothes still sticking to her from the sweat of the night. She meant to scroll her phone, maybe check her email. Instead, sleep came hard and fast.
And with it, the dream.
She was back in the velvet room, but everything was softer. Louder. Redder. The walls pulsed like they had a heartbeat. Candles melted into puddles on the floor, filling the air with the smell of blood-orange and clove.
Stack stood across from her, suit jacket off now. The sleeves of his burgundy shirt rolled to the elbows. The gold on his wrist glinted in the candlelight, and his grill caught her eye when he smiled.
Not a smirk. Not cold.
This smile was hot and low and deliberate.
He crossed the room without a word, steps soundless, until his hands were on her waist. His touch wasn’t demanding. It was magnetic. Her body leaned in before her mind caught up.
“Still not scared?” he murmured.
His voice brushed her skin like silk and sin.
“No,” she said, or maybe just thought it. In dreams, it didn’t matter.
He pressed his forehead to hers, just long enough for her to feel the thrum of something ancient behind his skin. Then his lips traced the spot on her neck he’d bitten. Not kissing. Not quite.
Tasting.
She gasped.
And woke up breathless.
Her bedroom was dark and quiet. The fan whirred above her, and outside someone’s dog barked once, then stopped. Her skin was slick with sweat, but she didn’t feel hot.
She felt hollow. Wired. A little drunk on something that hadn’t happened.
She stared at the ceiling, heart pounding, and reached for her phone.
The screen lit her face in blue, and for a moment, she didn’t recognize herself. Her eyes were too sharp. Her lips too calm. She looked like someone with secrets. The kind of girl you warned people about.
Eden opened her messages and scrolled to the last number in her phone.
504-9VAMPYR.
She stared at it for a long minute, thumb hovering. Then she typed three words.
When’s the next?
She hit send. No emoji. No punctuation. Just intent.
The message delivered with a quiet chime.
And Eden leaned back in her bed, the dream still clinging to her skin like smoke.
She didn’t know what came next.
But she knew she wanted more.
Her phone buzzed again.
Tomorrow. Midnight. Same place. Wear red.
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Tag List: @whoaitslucyylu @omgffs @healanette @secret89sblog @nahimjustfeelingit-writes @uzumaki-rebellion @soufcakmistress @thickemadame @blackpantherismyish @kumkaniudaku @youreadthatright @post-woke @chaneajoyyy @kissmyafropuff @empressdede @melodyofmbaku @blktinkerbell @turbulentvoids @writerbee-ffs @jasssdee1 @cerya @hearteyes-for-killmonger @theegoldenchild @theogbadbitch @honggihwa @dashhoney25 @jackierose902109 @hotcommodityyy @browngirldominion @j0ysyndr0m3
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 11 days ago
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Hi I saw that you were taking requests and I was wondering if you were interested in doing something with girldad smoke whose teen daughter has his negotiation skills and her uncle's smart mouth and hustler mentality getting into trouble at school and reader being upset because obviously she get it from those two
Or a smoke x stack x reader where they are together and they meet readers family who don't know about them and how they react to the relationship maybe throw in an annoying old fling of readers who won't leave her alone
Obviously only if you're interested it's cool if you're not
ou, Smoke, and Stack have been in a relationship for one year. But your relationship is anything but normal. Not many people date two siblings at the same time. So, you’ve decided to keep things private to save yourself from public scrutiny and prying eyes. The boys don’t care, as long as you don’t take your love away — that’s all they want: your love and affection.
You're lying on the couch with Stack holding your feet in his lap and Smoke sitting beside you.
“So, when are we going to tell your parents about us?” Stack asks, breaking the peaceful silence as the three of you watch television.
At the sound of his words, your heart drops at the uncomfortable question. Your eyes bulge.
“What?” you ask, sitting up from your position.
“You heard him. When are you going to introduce us?” Smoke pauses the television and turns to you.
In your mind, you're scrambling to come up with a million excuses to put this meeting off. But ultimately, none of them seem believable.
The twins are anything but stupid — pushy, sure — but stupid? Not a chance in hell.
“Baby, I would love to, but… you know how my family is.”
At your reply, Stack’s face curls in annoyance at your lame excuse, and he moves your feet from his lap.
“Bullshit,” he spits, standing up from the couch.
Smoke silently shakes his head at the situation unfolding. You reach out to place your hand on his arm, but he moves it before you can touch his skin — he feels betrayed by your lies.
“Elijah,” you croak, hurt by your usually silent lover. Smoke has always been the type to still love you, no matter how upset he got. After dating them for a while, you’ve grown used to Stack’s chaotic, unpredictable energy. But you’ve also come to understand the quiet storm that is Smoke.
“Are you ashamed of us or something?” Smoke asks, raising a brow.
You immediately shake your head. “No, baby, I love you both too much for that.”
Stack scoffs at your pretty words. “You sure as hell ain’t acting like it. We wanna be like normal couples and meet your family. Nothing in our lives has been normal or peaceful — except for you.” He confesses this, locking his deep brown eyes onto yours.
You exhale at the weight of his words and start to feel ashamed for trying to shut them out of another part of your life.
“I only said no because my family might not accept our relationship. They may view it as… unnatural,” you explain, looking at them both.
Your family is very religious, while you identify as atheist or agnostic. You’re not as deep into faith as they are. You prefer facts over fiction or fairy tales, which always makes things awkward. Even when you bring up a progressive idea, for some reason, those old folks still fantasize about "the good ol' days."
“So what — we’re supposed to be your dirty little secret until you walk down the aisle and give them a nice surprise?” Smoke asks, not buying your explanation.
“No—” you begin, but Stack cuts you off.
“Are we always supposed to disappear every time you get on FaceTime with them?”
You sigh heavily, trying again.
“I’m not saying—”
Smoke adds in, “Nah, Stack, she wants to keep her famous lie going — you know, that she's 'focusing on herself,' whatever that shit means.”
You shut your mouth, having no good comeback to combat their words.
Instead, you dramatically flop onto the back of the couch, looking at the ceiling and wishing you could rewind time by five minutes.
“Oh, now you ain’t got nothing to say?” Stack crosses his arms, standing in front of the television, refusing to let the conversation die.
After some thought, you come to the conclusion that you have nothing left to lose. So, reluctantly, you agree.
“Okay.”
The Moore twins break into big grins.
One week later
You sit in the passenger seat of Smoke’s car as Stack leans forward from the back like an eager kid, eyes glued to your family home. Then he shifts his attention to your queasy, uneasy face.
“Calm down, we’ll behave,” he snickers, placing a hand on your cheek and rubbing his thumb soothingly.
You hastily push his hand away.
“Not right now, Stack. I don’t have time for your games. When we get inside, I need you to behave,” you say, turning to look at him directly.
You don’t even glance at Smoke — he knows better. He doesn’t act like a crazy man.
“Whatever. Let’s go. I’m ready to meet my in-laws,” Stack says as he gets out of the car. Then he opens your door, standing there with his hand out, ready for you to place your palm in his.
You look at him reluctantly, then slowly place your hand in his, wondering if it’s too late to back out.
Sensing your hesitation, both twins each grab one of your arms and begin walking you toward the door.
“Don’t run now — we haven’t even made it to the door yet,” Smoke says, tightening his grip.
Stack firmly knocks.
Moments later, your mother opens the door with a smile — which quickly fades when she sees your uneasy face.
“Honey, what’s wrong? I thought you said we were meeting your lover.”
You say nothing, heart racing, hoping she picks up on the situation herself.
She looks past you to the twins.
“Hello. I’m Elijah, and this is my brother Elias. We’re both taken with your child,” Smoke says in the most gentlemanly voice possible.
Your mother looks back at you, eyes wide — and promptly faints.
“Mama!” you cry, breaking free from the boys to check on her.
Leaning over her, you place a hand on her forehead. Then you turn to the twins, frustration bubbling.
“Now do you see why I didn’t want you to meet them?” you scoff, then turn back toward your mother. “Monica, what are you doing on the floor?” you hear your father call out as his footsteps approach.
Just when you think the day can’t get any worse, it does.
You remember — all of this started just because they were so desperate to meet your family.
Stack mutters, “Baby, your mama’s dramatic, and I don’t even know her yet,” adjusting his clothes.
Then your father finally appears at the door. He takes one look at the twins, then down at you.
“What the fuck is this?” he asks, staring at you with a mix of anger and disappointment.
You focus on your mother, unable to meet his eyes.
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 13 days ago
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did u guys see their grills are on opposite sides. ok gn ily
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 14 days ago
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Like I know it's not everyone's cup of tea, but their need to me more yandere sinners content. The only fic on this I have seen have been on Remmick, and after everyting out beloved characters have been through, them going a little yandere wouldnt be to out of the box.
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 14 days ago
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𝐒𝐧𝐞𝐚𝐤 𝐩𝐞𝐞𝐤 𝐨𝐟 “𝐓𝐲𝐩𝐚“
Pairing-Elijah*Smoke*Moore x Black reader
You’ve finally met your match
A/N- Lmk if I should finish this
He wasn’t the man your mama warned you about.
He was the man your mama prayed you never met.
Dark-skinned, tatted, six-foot-something with a gold smile that matched the bullets in his clip. Drove a matte black AMG like. Talked slick, walked smoother, smelled like Dior.
A trappin’-ass, country-ass, never-switch-up-on-the-gang-ass nigga.
Exactly the kind you swore you’d never fall for.
And you? You weren’t soft. You had your own bag, your own attitude, your own reasons for not trusting anybody. People called you stuck-up, unbothered, hard to impress. And you were.
Until he came through.
It was late, the city hot with summer, the music too loud, the club too packed. You sat in your section surrounded by girls who talked too much and men who couldn’t afford to look your way. You were halfway done with your drink when you felt it—that stare.
Head turned. Eyes met. And there he was.
Smoke.
Leaning on his Benz like he had nowhere to be and everyone owed him something. Chains glinting, jaw tight, eyes on you like he’d been waiting for the moment all night.
“You keep starin’, ma. Might as well come sit on somethin’.”
You rolled your eyes—but you moved.
Always did when it came to him.
He pulled you onto his lap like you weighed nothing, palms spreading across your thigh, voice low in your ear.
“Heard you like ‘em with motion. I am the motion.”
⸝
That night turned into weeks.
Late night pull-ups. Cash on the dresser. Your name in his mouth while you rode him in backrooms of strip clubs he lowkey owned. You ain’t post each other—but everybody knew.
He made sure of it.
Whispers in the city: Smoke got a girl now. The baddest one. Don’t even look her way unless you ready to die.
He took care of you without askin’.
Hair, nails, rent, tuition—you ain’t lift a finger unless it was to count the stacks he left on your dresser.
And the sex?
Ruthless.
He picked you up when he fucked you. Spoke in tongues against your skin. Pressed his gun into your back like a reminder: this ain’t no regular nigga.
⸝
You weren’t supposed to fall.
But you did. Hard. Quiet. Deep.
In love with a man who talked more with his hands than his mouth.
A man who kissed you like it might be the last time every time.
A man who never said I love you but always showed up when the world went quiet.
So when he looked you in the eyes, his voice barely a whisper as he said—
“You mine now. Act like it.”
—you didn’t argue.
You smiled.
Took his Glock.
And rode shotgun.
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 14 days ago
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brat!reader x countryboyfriend!smoke
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pov: a little date riding your horses around the property + pretty instagram pictures nd texts 🙊
🧁 taglist -> @prettyfilmz , @hallucinagin , @woahitslucyylu , @queenofklonnie22 , @cafeluvs , @earthreturn , @bl3ssyn , @michifilmz , @tonichildsdaughterduh , @thebumbqueen , @tojisteddy
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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Annie: “They gave me the willies.”
Stack: “Yeah, well, Crackers at night time will do that to you.”
😂😂😂😂
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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Wunmi Mosaku & Michael B. Jordan as Annie and Smoke Moore SINNERS SCREEN TEST
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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Sinners (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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SINNERS
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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MICHAEL B. JORDAN as Smoke SINNERS | 2025
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 16 days ago
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SINNERS (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 18 days ago
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SINNERS 2025 | dir. Ryan Coogler
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jiminsthickthighs ¡ 18 days ago
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*puts a gun to my head* THEY GOT ME
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